|
Series. 6:
259—283.
Dan, R. A. (1957)Theosteodontokeratic culture of AM.s'fra/o/?i'//iecu,
t/?rewier/iei[.?.
Transvaal Museum Memoirs. 10:
1-105.
Dart, R. A. (1959)
Adventures with the Missing Link.
New York, Viking Press.
Darwin, C. R. (1859)
The Origin of Species.
London, J. Murray.
Darwin, C. R. (1871)
The Descent of Man.
London, J. Murray.
Dawson, C., and Woodward, A. S. (1913) On the discovery of a Paleolithic human
skull and mandible in a flint bearing gravel at Piltdown.
Quarterly Journal ofthe Geological Society, London, 69:
117—151.
Dawson, C., and Woodward, A. S. (1914) Supplementary note on the discovery of a
Palaeolithic human skull and mandible at Piltdown (Sussex).
QuarterlyJournal of the Geological Society, London, 70:
82-99.
Day, M. H. (1978) Functional interpretations of the morphology of postcranial
remains of early African hominids.
In
Jolly, C. J., ed.
Early Hominids ofAfrica.
London, Duckworth, pp. 311—345.
Day, M. H. (1985) Hominid locomotion – fromTaung to the Laetoli footprints.
In
Tobias, P. V., ed.
Hominid Evolution: Past, Present, and Future.
New York, Alan R. Liss, pp. 115—128.
Day, M. H. (1989) Fossil man: the hard evidence.
In
Durant, J. R„ed.
HumanOrigins.
Oxford, Clarendon, pp. 9-26.
Day, M. H., and Molleson, T. I. (1973) The Trinil femora.
Symposia of the Societyfor the Study of Human Biology, 2:
127—154.
Day, M. H., and Napier, J. R. (1964) Hominid fossils from Bed I, Olduvai Gorge,
Tanganyika: fossil foot bones.
Nature, 201:
967—970.
Day, M. H., and Wood, B. A. (1968) Functional affinities of the Olduvai Hominid
8 talus.
Man, Second Series. 3:
440—455.
De Lumley, H. (1969) A Palaeolithic camp at Nice.
Scientific American, 220(5):
42-50.
|
|